-- James A. Donald: > > You are making all this crap up. Eric Cordian > Each of the stories I cited was reported by multiple news > outlets.
Multiple pinko liars. > The Donahue story alone had 12 hits on Google News. Donahue's abysmal ratings disprove the story that Donahue was fired for opposing the war.. If you get twelve hits on a story that is obviously phony, then that shows which views are being promoted, and which censored, shows the direction of the bias -- indeed even if the story was not obviously false, the number of hits that you get on it would also be evidence that it is obviously false. If you get twelve hits from major news sources promoting the claim that pinkos do not get a fair deal on major news sources, that is pretty good evidence that they get a good deal more than a fair deal. If you got twelve hits saying he was fired for his views, the story is self refuting. > One would hardly make up a story about a court of appeals > decision. One can make up an absurd spin on a court of appeals decision. James A. Donald: > > Liberals cannot succeed in talk shows because they hate and > > despise their audience. Eric Cordian > You know, I think "conservative" is one of the > nicest-sounding terms ever invented for "backward prude." Just as I said. James A. Donald: > > He was getting about one quarter the audience of the > > competion. The nightmare scenario that MSNBC was so > > alarmed by was that no one was watching him vomit hatred > > over his audience. Eric Cordian > Donahue was doing no worse than other crap on MSNBC which > wasn't cancelled, and Donahue's ratings had recently risen. News is supposed to be a ratings anchor, the defining capability that makes a network a network. Donahue was not being compared to reruns of Dora the explorer, but to other people's talk shows, in particular to "The O'Reilly Factor". Donahue was a distant third in the _cable__news__ratings_, and the reason for his failure was that he was "out of touch with the current marketplace" -- polite euphemism for the fact that he despised his audience. You can get prime time video news from a major network, cannot get it from Blockbuster rentals or from most cable channels. You can get videos from the internet, but you cannot get video news Thus if a prime time news show gets ratings similar to "other crap", it is going to be canceled very fast indeed. And we can tell which way the bias goes, from the fact that O'Reilly is universally called a right wing, or extreme right wing, show host, when in reality his purported views are constructed on the basis of focus groups to be right down the exact middle of the target demographic. The Fox slogan is "fair and balanced news", and whether or not it is "fair", it is certainly balanced -- balanced to be right down the middle of their target audience -- a policy that must sometimes get in the way of being fair. James A. Donald: > > Sure the press is biased, but there is plenty of stuff > > that is very far from pro Israel, even on channels that > > are openly pro Israel, such as Fox. Eric Cordian > Let me know when the first station puts the logo "JINSA" > under Richard Perle and the rest of the pundits we are > supposed to think are randomly picked objective commentators > on the Middle East. I saw a representative of Hamas on some Fox talk show. He was introduced as such, but they did not put the logo "Hamas baby killer" under him. --digsig James A. Donald 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG A7dKZ6eYZa4mNJ6b3MUit+B7f0J5wsQ9npVLVkOQ 4mfx/Ub5+cRkD1mZngr/hdQdwTTsqoA+UnYyisG+t